The use of positron emission tomography in the clinical assessment
of dementia
Source: Semin Nucl Med
1992 Oct;22(4):233-246.
Author: Mazziotta JC;Frackowiak RS;Phelps ME PubMed ID: 1439869
Abstract:
A number of reasons can be cited for performing a test that
identifies patients early in their course who have fatal and currently
untreatable neurological disorders. At this stage of illness there is
clinical ambiguity. The patient, family, and physician are typically
faced with a battery of negative test results and an ambiguous clinical
impression that can lead to periodic repetition of tests that involve
cost, inconvenience, potential morbidity to the patient, and lack of
definitive diagnosis. An accurate test would lead to the avoidance of
these low-yield, repetitive, and costly evaluations. In addition, such
studies can identify homogeneous groups of individuals with degenerative
disorders leading to dementia who could be enrolled in experimental
therapeutic programs. In these programs therapies could be monitored in
an objective and noninvasive fashion using positron emission tomography
(PET). The magnitude of the health problems resulting from the dementing
illnesses is great in terms of medical practice, economics, and family
hardship. The number of individuals with these disorders is predicted to
increase dramatically in the future. The ability to provide an accurate
diagnosis and more clear prognosis early in the disease course should
diminish ambiguity for patients, families, and physicians. Ample
evidence is cited in this article to show that PET has the ability to
provide such information objectively and noninvasively